Abstract

Simple SummaryThe bobcat (Lynx rufus) is a medium-sized carnivore that lives in remote and urban habitats. Here, we evaluate how bobcats exploit a highly urbanized section of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, Texas, USA by evaluating their space use and activity patterns. We found that bobcats use more natural habitat areas within urban areas, such as agricultural fields and creeks, and avoid highly anthropogenic features, such as roads. Bobcat home ranges overlap one another, especially in areas with preferred habitat types, but they are neither avoiding nor attracted to one another during their daily movements. This study highlights how bobcats are able to navigate a built environment and the importance of green space in such places.Global urbanization is rapidly changing the landscape for wildlife species that must learn to persist in declining wild spacing, adapt, or risk extinction. Many mesopredators have successfully exploited urban niches, and research on these species in an urban setting offers insights into the traits that facilitate their success. In this study, we examined space use and activity patterns from GPS-collared bobcats (Lynx rufus) in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, Texas, USA. We found that bobcats select for natural/agricultural features, creeks, and water ways and there is greater home-range overlap in these habitats. They avoid roads and are less likely to have home-range overlap in habitats with more roads. Home-range size is relatively small and overlap relatively high, with older animals showing both greater home-range size and overlap. Simultaneous locations suggest bobcats are neither avoiding nor attracted to one another, despite the high overlap across home ranges. Finally, bobcats are active at all times of day and night. These results suggest that access to natural features and behavioral plasticity may enable bobcats to live in highly developed landscapes.

Highlights

  • Human populations are expanding alongside anthropogenic development and loss of natural landscapes

  • Research has begun to focus on carnivores living in anthropogenic landscapes, with the most recent work focused on highly urbanized landscapes

  • 17,918 GPS locations from nine bobcats were used for home-range analysis using local convex polygons and 12,740 GPS locations from nine bobcats were used for home-range analysis using kernel utilization distribution (KUD)

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Summary

Introduction

Human populations are expanding alongside anthropogenic development and loss of natural landscapes. Carnivore populations and their large prey species have declined [1]. Contributions to their decline include both indirect impacts, such as habitat loss and fragmentation [2,3], and direct impacts, such as retaliatory killing or hunting [4]. Carnivores must learn to live in the remaining and ever-dwindling natural landscapes or adapt to survive in anthropogenic landscapes. Research has begun to focus on carnivores living in anthropogenic landscapes, with the most recent work focused on highly urbanized landscapes. Established populations of leopards (Panthera pardus) and striped hyenas (Hyaena hyaena) live amidst densely populated rural and urban areas of India [8,9,10]. Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) live entirely on domestic prey and anthropogenic scraps in Ethiopia [11,12] and benefit from increased human activity and presence in Kenya [13]

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